Abstract

As part of the NWO Science4Arts REVISRembrandt project (2012–2018), novel chemical imaging techniques were developed and applied to the study of Rembrandt’s late experimental painting technique (1651–1669). One of the unique features in his late paintings is his abundant use of smalt: a blue cobalt glass pigment that he often combined with organic lake pigments, earth pigments and blacks. Since most of these smalt-containing paints have discolored over time, we wanted to find out more about how these paintings may have originally looked, and what the role of smalt was in his paint. This paper reports on the use of smalt in complex pigment mixtures in Rembrandt’s Homer (1663), Mauritshuis, The Hague. Macroscopic X-ray fluorescence imaging (MA-XRF) assisted by computational analysis, in combination with SEM-EDX analysis of paint cross-sections, provides new information about the distribution and composition of the smalt paints in the painting. Paint reconstructions were carried out to investigate the effect of different percentages of smalt on the overall color, the drying properties, translucency and texture of the paint. Results show that the influence of (the originally blue) smalt on the intended color of the paint of the Homer is minimal. However, in mixtures with high percentages of smalt, or when combined with more transparent pigments, it was concluded that the smalt did produce a cooler and darker paint. It was also found that the admixture of opaque pigments reduced the translucent character of the smalt. The drying tests show that the paints with (cobalt-containing) smalt dried five times faster compared to those with glass (without cobalt). Most significantly, the texture of the paint was strongly influenced by adding smalt, creating a more irregular surface topography with clearly pronounced brushstrokes. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) was used as an additional tool to reveal differences in translucency and texture between the different paint reconstructions. In conclusion, this study confirmed earlier assumptions that Rembrandt used substantial amounts of smalt in his late paintings, not for its blue color, but to give volume and texture to his paints, to deepen their colors and to make them dry faster.

Highlights

  • Use of smalt in Rembrandt’s late works Rembrandt’s late works, which date from the 1650s and 1660s, are characterized by their loose, sketchy appearance, lively brushwork and unusual surface roughness

  • Additional computational analysis using T-Stochastic Neighbor Embedding (t-SNE) recognized 18 different clusters in the painting with similar elemental compositions, most of which had been recognized by manual visual comparison

  • T-SNE may not yield many new insights when compared to a manual visual interpretation of the elemental distribution maps, it is very useful in reducing all the information of the maps into one readable representation

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Summary

Introduction

Use of smalt in Rembrandt’s late works Rembrandt’s late works, which date from the 1650s and 1660s, are characterized by their loose, sketchy appearance, lively brushwork and unusual surface roughness. The paint-outs based on samples from Homer’s cap (samples x05 and x06) have a dark green appearance, due to the higher percentages of yellow lake and bone black in these smalt paints

Results
Conclusion

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